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USS Epperson PAGE SIX ns wae 1 **poys and sixteen ready to swing rackets @hat starts tomorrow first round matches place Girls Baara Twiehaus vs. Norma AVP sepaspeos = Audrey Richardson vs. Theresa Bardwellenc Barbara Adams vs. Geraldine Weakley. Galo Curry vs. Eleanor Gato. June Yates vs. Jo Ann Atwel Donna Williams vs. Carol Caruthers. Grace Fernandez vs: Carlene Moore. Lym Sellers vs. Matie Ren- Boys z Dor Cruz vs. E. Vidal: Joseph Carbonell May. 1950 Janior Tennis Cham-| 50 Ju — OLD STARS OF BASEBALI te | ‘Lonie Shiver vs. Joseph Smith. | George Haskins vs. Julio Hen-/ riquez. } Peter Knight vs. George Has kins. F t Jimmy Solomon” ¥8. “Danny; O'Briant. | Stuart Yates vs. Johnny Sel-} lers. | Robert Bethel vs. Robert Piar- rot. I } Bob Staves vs. Julio Henriquez. This is Key West's first Boys and Girls tennis lists this year are fifteen years and separate: tournament could have restricted. to | younger. If a} been held in the 16 to 18 years Clent game would. ered in. quaint old. New have been over 60 for the Juniors, in mid-February of (393 but Key West does not yet have their luck in the $5,000 Crepes enough tennis courts to permit ‘City open. fonce again that golf i The Key West Tennis Club has ‘gravating and unp: class, the total entries this number to play. given 30 cens of new balls to the event and Charlie Smith has an- by a nounced that the Lions Club will and it award prizes to the two winners golf. Ky Laffoon te¢ and the runners-up. All matches a home towr will be the best out of three sets.! Haas, to win and, with a best ball of call scores to Ralph Hartenstine they had to share th at-1680.J, immediately after the ary spotlight > money winner of the tin ny Revolta. watched theeswift rise of tennis City Park Mayor par 67, which The winners keep the balls match. ~ Key Wesfprg, ‘megnwhile, have with an approving eye. John Cruz vs. winner of Staves; and Henriquez. | } 1s | nior Tennis Championship Play PaeE KEY WEST CITIZEN FRIDAY, APRIL 14,-1950 Discs; Alliance eset aeanipinmaclic stoi At Tella OOO A aoe eS: Starts Tomorrow At Bayview Park { THESE BASEBALL STARS ef she old days got back into uniform end played fer, the Dallas Eagles at the opening of the Texes League season in Dalles. Six other old-time stars also played. former Cleveland Iadian outfielder: Ty Cobb, the famous “Georgia history as a centerfielder for the Detroit Tigers, and Duffy Lewis. Fifty thousand people saw the game with Tulsa. Left to righ?: Tris Speaker, Peach.” who made baseball formerly of the Boston Red Sox. Donn Memory championships | and the youngsters have repnt-| Ty ed with high enthusiasm. The; ne (By The Assoer The star players « And. “they a The tournament was _ 5 pro-amateur COt: produced ‘some young: the ter, cor with t Johnny. to links in fiv Eisner said today, “Boys and girls petitive course record It prompted most of the pros ing tennis pldvides. I'm all for it.” to predict they would need the kind of character build-| Bob Spottswood pointed out that comparatively easy youngsters,” in the while J. J.2Qrevor and Captain However, the weathermar s training not have had their confidence. H “Tennis socializes Nelson emphasized its in self-conttél: “Moreover,” add- €4@ ‘the Captain, “It’s fun.” Dr, Fred Carbonell announced today that # the meeting of the & ‘West Tennis Club on Mon-} May 1, plans will be com- pleted for regular weekly lessons for boys and girls and the start- ing date fixed! « MisLan§ tity Leacur ‘ ; W.L. Pet ; Dai 4 1 .800 Key West _ 4 2 666 0 4 .000 Sports Calendar BASEBALL stand Baseball League (Mugicipal Stadium, fternoon) SUNDAY 1:00—-Key West Cubans vs USS Epperson (seven in- nings).; 3:00—Key West »Cubans_ vs Adams}Dairy (sé¥en, innings).' t 1s Park (Morning, Afternoon and Night) Daily Sunday. play: : GOLF Golf Course (Stock Island) Daily an@ Sunday play : KATING ermay—} PM. 7:30 to OARL view Park (Morning, wnoon and Night) Daily ani Sunday: play. cour tournament to proceded to open up so: i | 1 Prof. Calvin B. Hoover, of Duke University, noted econo- mist, born at Berwick, Ill, 63 years ago. eel i clouds and the links died up so badly th round was postponed fo: rush to birdie the greens to post a for t t Tt was still wet when teed off 24 hours later. Ti the fact that high winds the course made it a to for one and all. Harry Cooper turned lbest effort as he finishe: were 17th, and 1 Or large preceded F ipetitidn! However limin- e-under was a new cc se apart follow r ain he first 7 t hat plu swept in the dw nd¢ 68. His nearest rival was Jug McSpaden. Jug got off toa shaky start but settled down ‘fi wind up with a 71. Horton Smith gave the 5 é thrill. He shot an eagle three on the 18th hole to tie seven other for third place with a 73 Second round competition also ran the gamut of good < golf, Cooper s par 35 on the first nine putter went sour and | settle for a 73, v a 141 total. His also were having however. As a re baseball star, |jumped into the spotli had shot an 80 in the f at the links. ammy birdied the fir dazzled the boys w three on the 480 folowed it third, sixth, seventh anc holes. Byrd came tee seven strokes under needed only a par fou 450-yard ninth for a seven-under-par 30. His drive was down the middie, but cracked. His iron sho’ green was too hard. soared over the _ carpe wagon rut. Shooting © six on the hole. ed hot on hi to the and =bad t hole le , Bigs ry football scond round 72 fora 143 » total, two strokes off the pace. The final 36 holes were jam- med into the next day. The muddy course continued RACK ON THE DIAMONI ‘ ose eissetteeeeeertsiriaatiiemdteritaiieaiinaittin SCHWARTZ OF STANFORD HAS PLENTY ON HIS WIND THESE DAYS aches Football * fe € And Team Faces | Heavy Schedute Of | "Games Coiling Season : Vie Abaceintcd Pressey Marehie eyday at than 200 candidates at 3end. would have «the > ‘golden dignte: course, this never Notre Dame, an@ixthe Bigs weat on’ to victory~-with Schwartz heading the attack. Schwartz turned to coaching, ing. tn the backfield.“ And today | hé is head U coach - at Stanford | terday was the first day of} practice at Stanford and} approximately 60 players report-| ed. This is under the turnout | t Notre Dame. But Schwartz is| o that. Few schools get the} turnout of Notre} pring | anford did not have too bad} eason in 1949. The Pacific t Indians won seven games, ee and tied one. Also, it! nest scoring Stanford | n in history, with 366 points. | Schwartz has a rebuilding job; hands, Fifteen lettermen departed, ‘including _ five | gulars who fermed the back- ne of the 1949 squad. He has ost the ‘entire right’ side of his line. Such stalwarts .as- Center Jim Castagnoli, Guerd Don Fix, Al Rau and End Ken > now graduates. Schwartz also lost *hree fullbacks, Bill De Young, Emery Mitchell and Bud Klein. However, will have 26 nucleus of h on hi Tackle the Stanford coach lettermen as the 1950 team. Among to take its toll. Cooper scrambled them are six regulars. ‘Schwartz’ | Left Halfback Harry Notre Dame, a turnout) and Right Halfback Bob White. was.on_a decline} will open their campaign on Sep- Of! tember 23rd, when they face San happened at Jose Sta.e Then will come Fighting opponents «s Oregon State, ‘take “many. @ Clara, UCLA, Washington, South- spear- ern California, Washington state, Army ané California. All in all, Schwartz has plenty afteg winning All-America rank- on his mind these daysjw» s Agui So far Many Records Set Up Wrestling Rough In Island City Baseball Played So Far By PEDRO AGUILAR nd two have ended The first gume | ONE-MINUTE jin Orlando, As Pair | SPORT 5 QUIZ ‘Ws Carried Out latest on | J was the = | J as th League So Far In 1950 F nauaienn, thai aie Se he eamebac re) jart of wrestling now is chiefly nag he Philadel Ja form of entertainment, rather oC a : Figures 4— ———— than competitive sport . i i ’ eae ee is m what team did Brave Records Out; | PR h R lipak ke it, Dick S ome to join ‘the a ey e ~ or 1 © 4 Iwenty-Two Games em 360 oom jfor gran i the indook ainwien Sie ag ee ster ne f + ee aaa z = n eats OMmbers RES chee ec a ‘ THE ANSWERS: in 1950 have ‘tually That H Canada with a ‘ondition. Ry 9-6 Score the ¢ ghd the < Bamboo Room won over r te Valdez B-29 Bombers last night b I ng pitcher and Didi T core of 9 to 6. Valdez pite aa of the evening won ‘by the 0. 10° Se RRrER eRe a Somebody Stea \ Bombers. over Adams Dairy, by th? losers. > ¢ 2 a score of 17 to 2. Vidal won Jack Villar hit a homer At tt I ] j G6 f¢ 4 re and V a > with Acevedo, Valdez, and Mal- joined ates Uli Car a Albio Acevedo hit the grat hitting triples. Doubles over th . >) Wirephoto homer of the year. Fernandez were pounded out by Barber Of ( Vi (®) Wirephoto the first hit of the.year and Ra- and Arita ponent had hit 1 yOvernor botin the first out. J. Rodriguez Score: ed up ancther ct BOSTON iP) One ~ of | the made the first triple and In- R.H.E ver Robah t bout being the governor aham the first to fan. C. Val- B-29 Bombers 6 5 3 's had to b vou can get a dez the first to walk, Beuford Bamboo Room 913 2 rooms for ooking license scored the first. run. E, Rodri- atteries: Thomas and Sands bruises. But the cli- ir car. In the-case quez caught the first fly. Knowles Valdez and Castro te As_ the of Massachuset: —-— was first hit by a pitched ball ae e fr er is “S-L.” Ingraham hit the first double In the nightcap, the Tides Inn backer of the s don’t have Didi Torres fanned six, the first Won over Sonar School by a 19 Dick Powell, sailed into the w letters mix 1 with the num# double play was made by Ra- to 3 score. Tides scored 14 runs guy who had g the first unless you're botin to J. Rodriguez to A. Ace- in the second frame. Kerr hit a ct e fan with s pretty nifty, vedo. year was pl the Cubars Fina] score. bans 10. They are April 2 by Ju. anta the Cubans. The longest game tween the Naval Air Station and It lasted 14 innings. Naval Air, 3unzy Villareal fanned 14 batters on April 9, and 12 on He has a total of 47 for Villareal. ch The Sseéond, Adams 0. Vidal fanned 10. The third was person 0. Blounquist pitched four {and Rounds three The highest scote was Dairy 20 homer a haymaker mouth Culverheuse pitched for Sonar = weeting for the Tides se $5 Baseball Scores By The Associated Press iv on Cape Cod thought they , too, when the gover- n there at Orleans he plates were stolen. ne governor figures some ‘soap- box racer kids may have ‘taken the plates. He says “if ‘the plates are found, they better be attach to a soap box racer!” : so far this ed on April 2, be- 11; Cu- runs, Epperson 2. On April 2, Villareal allowed the . Epperson *, one hit. ! Florida International Games won and lost by differ- | League Bill McColl, whe alternated be- the year, feflowed by McManus ent clubs during the year: 1 ; sieht ¥ tween end and tackle; Tackle! with 30, Casa 26, Vidal 25, Fer- Bombers won , lost none, tied Lakeland 8, Fort Lauderdale 5. y4,,y1an4 placed the Baltimore Gordy White; Guard Dick Lucas; nandez 15, Rounds 13, Torres 18, dne. Cubans won 6 and lost 6, Miami 21, St. Petersburg 3. G.igle under protection in 3862. Quarterback Ga Kerkorian; Sweeting 11, Sanchez 10 and Joe ‘tied one. Havana 11, West Palm Beach % y Hugasian Lewis 10 Adams Dairy won 5, lost 7. 6 oe : There have been three shuts San Carlos won 3, lost 2 and Miami Beach 7, Tampa 2. Stanford has its usual rugged outs so far. The first was Sag tied ene. | ee. meant| schedule l:ned up. The Indians Carlos 4, Adams 0. D. Fernan- Naval Air Station won one, lost FLORIDA STATE dez won and allowed 4 hits, two none. ; Gainesvitle 8, Leesburg 6 Deland 5. Daytona Beach 0. Orlando 10, Sanford 3 Palatka 5, St. Augustine 3. Picked team Jost one and Ep- person has lost 4, tied one. Leading pitcher so far: Vidal won three lost none. Sweeting won two lost none. Dr. Ralph Arnold, of San Roberts won-one lost none. Merino, Czlif. famous consulting Blunquist won one, Jost none. engineer, born in Marshalltown, G. Lastres won one, lost-none. Towa, 75. years ago. Bombers 2 funs, Cubans 1, Ep- innings for , to a 72 in the third round, giv- ing his rivals a chance to pick p some ground, but most of i them blew the opportunity. Mec- Spaden and Byrd both skidded with scores of 75. Cooper started the fourth round in good fashion and pro- first 1p with birdies on the ceeded to sail around the 1 eighth ninth He ron the brilliant par good, right then he to the t into a ut of the |mud, he dubbed the shot and {was way short. Byrd finally wound up with a two-over-par ine in par figures. He had been unusually steady the entire tournament, but even he began to feel the strain of bad weather and excited fans. On the 12th hole, Cooper blew up. He fussed at some over-enthusiastic fans and then proceeded to take four putts from 30 feet. Cooper wound ip with a six on the par four hole. It was the first sign that Coop- er had shown that ‘he might blew up and fritter away his ‘healthy lead. But as it turned out, it was just a momentary lapse. He set- Even 60 he had a sparkling 32. tled down to par the next four He added a 35 on the back nine holes and then finished up with and posted a nifty Byrd back into strokes back of Cooper. The nearest Cooper was McSpaden, contention, the pace-setting and a 72-hole total of 285. Run- six rival to who shot 67. That put birdies on the 17th and 18th. Cooper posted another par 72 ner-up was McSpaden, who shot a final round 71 for a 289 tally. Any way, and every way, you measure it —FIRST...and Finest...at Lowest Cost! Measure size, and you'll find Chev- rolet’s the longest, heaviest car in its field—bar none. Measure styling and beauty, and you'll find it’s the only car in its field’ with the world-famous Body by Fisher. Measure driving-ease, and you'll find that only Chevrolet offers you your choice of the fihest no-shift driving ‘or-the finest staridard driving—at lowest gost. Measuregper- formance, riding-comfort and s@fety, and you'll find it’s the only low- a. 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